The devil
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Show & Tell

Andulka
h
tumblr dot com

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
No title available
Stranger Things

Product Placement
𓃗
Keni
RMH
Noah Kahan

blake kathryn

PR's Tumblrdome

★
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

roma★
Game of Thrones Daily
Mike Driver

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Libya
seen from Argentina
seen from United States
@songwithnosoul
The devil
you tell me that all the bad people are stupid. you tell me that stupid people should be killed, bred out, that evolution will leave them behind. i tell you that's not funny, that i have an intellectual disability, that i want to be allowed to love and to have children of my own. that maybe it's not the end of the world if "stupid" people get to stay. that my caregiver loves me and takes care of me. that she reads to me. that i get by with my little accessibility tools scattered about the house, my aac, and by being gentle. you tell me it's a joke. clearly you aren't like those REAL eugenicists, you only talk like them. you tell me surely i must agree- all the bad people, the ones who take away my rights, they must not be smart, they must be lacking some information to make them like this. i tell you smart people have hurt me more than anyone else because they know better and they still choose cruelty. these people in power aren't lacking anything. they have all the resources in the world and brains that work the way they want. they don't know struggle, they doom everyone who does. you don't stop talking about "stupid people" like we're a disease to eradicate. i note you down as one more smart person who has failed me by choosing to be cruel when you knew better
my controversial opinion is I don’t think Zuko was confused by “my first girlfriend turned into the moon”
he was there during siege of the North. he infiltrated the spirit oasis. he has an uncle who studies spirits and the spirit world. he watched the sky go dark then the moon suddenly reappear like everyone else in the entire world did. and most importantly he watched zhao get eaten by a giant godzilla fish spirit.
his entire life since he saw that beam of blue-white light in the south pole has been ‘this day has already been so goddamn weird’
The only really new information was that that was Sokka’s girlfriend
Important opinion in the tags that I need to have be part of the post:
Also, Iroh was there? He literally watched Sokka make out with the moon spirit. And you want to tell me that a romantic sap like him would not have immediately told Zuko about this romantic tragedy? Please, Zuko has known about this for ages, he just knows that this is not an acceptable situation in which to say “yeah, I know.”
Sokka: “My girlfriend turned into the moon.”
Zuko: “I know.” “Yes.” “She sure did.” “Uh huh.” “Tell me something new.” “Are we still talking about that?” “That’s rough, buddy.”
[image: tags by samwisethebold: #it’s not that he doesn’t get what sokka means #it’s that how on earth do you respond to that]
When you put it like that, this is actually a legendary display of tact on Zuko’s part
Hi, its me. The warmest creature in the world. I love you. Im the warmest creature in the world and I love you so much and I need to be in your lap right now. Yes, I know about the heat wave. That's okay though because I was already the warmest creature in the world so I don't mind. I love you and you need to let me sleep in your lap right now. I'm soooo warm and I love you sooo much. If you say no you'll be saying no to a thing that love you. Let me sleep in your lap. When I fall asleep I get warmer. I love you
disabled ppl we need to start lying to nosy people okay? you tell me i'm too young to need a cane and i will tell you point blank that maybe you should tell that to the guy who ran me over. you don't get an explanation of my health issues you get lies and depending on how much of an asshole i want to be that lie will be anything from a humble car crash to a 1 billion lions attack. mind yr business.
"i could never live like that" well maybe you'll have to because this happened overnight. yeah you heard me i was the most able bodied man in the world but then one morning bam i woke up disabled. yeah you could have that too. there's no cure either you'll just wake up one morning and now you have to live like me
"what happened" well have you ever seen looney tunes? yeah an anvil landed on me and squished me flat.
If you’re not Jewish, you can kindly shut the fuck up about the following:
The Talmud
Zionism
What is or is not antisemitism
The word “goy/goyim”
Jumblr: Feel free to add more.
“bagels” (it’s not one if it isn’t boiled!!!)
also, what can and can’t go on a bagel
the 6 genders thing
lilith
hanukkah (under the context of how much they talk about it. IT ISN’T OUR BIG ONE. NOT EVEN CLOSE.)
@edithsweetithh?
if someone is a "real jew" or not (no zionists are not "not real jews" i am going to throw a brick at you)
What "Chosen People" means
Tikkun olam, and other "Jewish values"
Kol Isha, and the role/treatment of women in Orthodox communities
Niggun
Bris
How we treat converts as born Jews
• the range of skin colors, hair texture, and facial features among Israeli citizens, and how a hypothetical American would categorize them on sight with no other indicators if they were standing on a random street corner in America, provided they were also perfectly silent and accentless and wearing """generic""" Western clothing
• the Tetragrammaton (especially trying to figure out how it "should" be pronounced!)
A member of law enforcement personnel works at the scene outside the US Consulate after shots were fired, in Toronto, …
A Jewish real estate agent has been brutally assaulted while on his way to meet a client at a Toronto commercial center, marking the latest in a string of targeted antisemitic hate crimes as hostility toward Jews and Israelis continues to intensify across Canada.
In a Facebook post, Joseph Bitton described the incident, alleging that a man identifying himself as a Shiite Houthi Muslim from Yemen threatened to kill him, shouted antisemitic slurs at him over his Jewish identity, and then physically attacked him.
According to Bitton’s account, the suspect accused Israel of “killing babies and committing genocide against Palestinians” before launching into a barrage of antisemitic insults, issuing threats, and escalating the confrontation into a violent attack.
The assailant then allegedly threw a parking ticket dispenser, bricks, stones, and metal bars at Bitton, then struck him with a thick wooden branch.
Bitton said he sustained only minor scratches and physical injuries after escaping the attack, but noted that the experience left him shaken and deeply unsettled.
“This is not the Canada where I grew up and lived for the past 64 years,” he wrote in the Facebook post.
Local police responded after Bitton called for help, arresting the suspect at the scene and opening an investigation, with authorities treating the attack as a suspected hate crime.
Like most countries across the Western world, Canada has seen a rise in antisemitic incidents over the last two years, in the wake of the Hamas-led invasion and massacre across southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
Antisemitic incidents in Canada surged to a record high in 2025 for the second consecutive year, with 6,800 acts of anti-Jewish hate reported nationwide, underscoring a persistently hostile climate for Jews and Israelis across the country.
The Jewish advocacy group B’nai Brith Canada released its annual report on antisemitism in April, documenting a 9.3 percent increase in hate crimes last year that surpassed the previous record total of 6,219 set in 2024.
Early 2026 data already indicate the country is on track to see its most violent year against the Jewish community in recent memory, with more violent antisemitic attacks recorded so far this year than during all of 2025. In total, 11 violent antisemitic attacks have already been recorded across the country since the start of 2026, surpassing the 10 violent incidents documented during all of last year.
Last month, a gunman opened fire in Montreal’s Côte-des-Neiges neighborhood, the heart of the city’s Jewish community, killing a police officer and a local rabbi in one of the latest violent attacks raising alarm over the safety of Jewish residents.
In May, a group of Jewish worshippers standing outside the Congregation Chasidei Bobov synagogue in Montreal was targeted in a drive-by shooting, leaving one person with minor injuries. A week earlier, three visibly Jewish residents were targeted in a separate antisemitic attack when suspects opened fire with a gel-pellet gun, causing minor injuries.
Two synagogues in Toronto were also targeted by gunfire earlier this year, marking the third shooting targeting Jewish institutions in less than a week and intensifying fears of a rapidly deteriorating security climate for Jews and Israelis across Canada.
I spent the afternoon arranging our books by size and color (and it’s so satisfying and looks amazing) and my partner came home and stared in shock at the bookcase and then said “i’m a librarian, you can’t do this.”
him: you split up all the song of ice and fire books
me: yeah i know, they’re all primary colors, it’s perfect
him: [self-destructs]
You’re a monster
As a former bookstore employee, this hurts my soul. I mean, sure it looks nice, but how do you find anything?
it has occurred me during this process that apparently not everyone thinks about books by what color they are? like, literally when i’m looking for a book, i picture it in my mind. i have a very…tactile experience with the books i read and idk! i thought everyone did that lol.
my partner was like “how will i find [this book] for instance” and i replied “easy, it’s purple” and he looked at me like i was a witch.
OP your brain is neat and I love you for it you funky little color-coded cupcake. But you’re still a monster.
This actually is interesting in terms of information-seeking behavior, which is a thing librarians think about a lot and often actually study (some library jobs require you to publish, and academic librarians, for instance, will often use the students at the college they work at to study how they search for information in order to figure out how to best provide them services).
When you go for an MLS (Master’s of Library Science, which is a thing, and which is usually required for “professional-level” library work [which is also a weird and contentious concept that I won’t go into here]), one of the things you study is the organization of information. This deals with how to determine what a book or other material is “about"—a concept we tongue-in-cheek call “aboutness"—and how to convey that to a potential user of the item and make it easy for them to find. Things like keywords and subject headings, do I put this book about how often wild birds attack aerial drones in with books about birds or with books about technology, if its a fictional novel do I put fantasy in it’s own section or mix it in with all of the other fiction, so on and so on.
OP is organizing books by how they would look for them. OP’s partner is thinking in terms of aboutness. This is a system that works for OP because it’s their personal library: they know basically what books they own and they only own books that are relevant to them, and if they know what the book looks like, that can be a quick way to find it.
In a library that assumes the public (or people who do not own that particular collection of books) are using the collection, that doesn’t work. Books are often re-issued in multiple covers, or re-bound in new covers when they get worn out, and if the user doesn’t know what the book looks like or is expecting a different cover, they’re lost. That’s why non-personal libraries used standardized cataloging systems like the Dewey Decimal System or Library of Congress System to organize a book by what it’s “about”, and then put books about the same or similar topics together, marked with labels and signage so a person unfamiliar with the book or collection can find their way to it.
Basically, OP’s system works for their own personal library, because it’s best suited to how the primary user—OP themselves—looks for books. OP’s librarian partner is coming from a background of thinking in terms of a public-facing collection, where aboutness is the key criteria and communicating it to a user unfamiliar with the collection is the priority.
And also, OP is a monster.
in anticipation of the upcoming funeral for the former leader of iran, i am begging all of my followers and mutuals to see beyond the western mindset and listen to actual iranians, and to not blindly reblog pro regime sentiments. khamenei is not your martyred anti-american hero. you can read this post for some tidbits of the terrible human being this man was especially to women, who are NOT free in iran. or you can just google the religious laws his regime enforced (and continues to enforce) upon iranian women. khamenei was a dictator. before his death, iranians took to the streets and protested the harsh rule of his regime, and thousands lost their lives in doing so. you can also look at my master post with reliable links to all of this information. when he was killed, there were celebrations in iran. if you consider yourself a feminist or an activist of any kind, ask yourself if this is a person you really want to mourn just to seem like “one of the good” americans/westerners. i believe the majority of you have your hearts in the right place and i really hope you take a second and think about iranian voices that will (and have been) be drowned out. and because i have to say it, this is not a pro war or pro trump post. this is a post to support iranian voices.
Heatwaves are coming to countries that have never really lived over 30ºC so here is some advice from Spain
@seven-oomen (I think you are already doing the best you can, given the circumstances, from what you mentioned, but just in case).
You have to turn your house into a cave. Many countries don't have blinders or anything thicker than a light curtain in their windows: you want your house to be as dark as possible during the day. Cover your windows with thick opaque curtains or with cardboard if you can't find/buy those curtains. I found isolating curtains a couple of years ago and, sure, they are a bit expensive, but they are a lifesaver (for both winter and summer). This one is harder up North because nights are way shorter than in Spain, but still worth a try.
Open only at night. All windows open to the max all night. If in the morning there is some breeze and it's fresh, leave it open until it stops being fresh. If you have to go to work before that, close everything, make it dark. Avoid opening during the hottest hours.
If the floor is not wooden and not carpet, mop it with water at night so that it evaporates and makes everything fresher. If it's wooden or carpet, I'm sorry (maybe wood also accepts being mopped, but I don't know enough about any kind of floor that's not some variation of stone or cement).
Fans are your friends. I have seen the "put ice in front of the fan" advice but never tested it, so if you do that, share how it goes.
Have all kinds of vegetables and liquids at home. Avoid cooking during the hottest hours. Here is some specific advice for food:
Cook early in the morning or late at night. Find recipes of salads, pures or any other kind of food that can be eaten cold. Brine foods are excellent: they're already cooked and vinegar is refreshing.
Some drinks that are also food are: gazpacho (there are many variations, find the one you like), ajoblanco (better than it looks like, it's like a watered up alioli with bread), tarator (Bulgarian drink with yoghurt and cucumber), ayran, fruit smoothies. None of them require heat to be prepared.
Keep a wet towel nearby to wet your neck and forehead. If you struggle to sleep at night, you can also cover yourself with a wet towel.
For daily life outside of home:
If you need to leave the house during the hottest hours: cover up. Wear a hat or a scarf or something on your head. People do not cover their heads enough and it helps in regulating temperature. You can also wet a scarf and put it in your head.
(Personally, I have realised that more layers is actually better: a hat may be itchy but a scarf and a hat is excellent because the scarf keeps the sweat which is refreshing and the hat has a layer of circulating air around. Similarly, an under t-shirt will keep the sweat and an over t-shirt will create circulating air. Long sleeves prevent the sun from touching your skin and this is sun protection but also protection from the actual sensation of burn. But that's just me and people tend to not like when I say it/not believe me, I'm putting it out here in case it helps someone)
If you don't want to cover your body, wear sunscreen for love's sake.
Carry a hand fan, water or other liquid at all times.
If you work from home or are otherwise not required to leave the house during the hottest hours, DO NOT. Buy groceries early in the morning or late in the evening. Live early in the morning or late at night. People say Spanish people like to party because we are out in the street late at night, but could there be another reason for this?
I am going to insist on this: do not be outside when it's hot and there is no shadow in the street.
And this is mainly it.
tbh "religious liberty" always felt like a uniquely weak reason that you should be allowed to do something. "I know it seems bad, but have you considered that I'm doing it because it's important for no reason?"
idk like. even modern secular liberal societies display such a common penchant for using innocuous feature of religion as an excuse to harass and legally punish the other that an instinct to carve out protections for religious practices seems indisputably useful? otherwise you get situations like France's "muslim women can lose their jobs for wearing hats, even ones required to do said job," nominally coming from a place of secularism and no state religion and feminism and in fact just an excuse to harass muslim women.
so i think understanding "religious liberty" as providing a degree of presumptive (but not infinite) protection is a good instinct for society to have bc people are always trying to figure out new excuses to be dicks to members of social groups they don't like and religion is a major axis along which this dickish behavior occurs.
Here’s the thing: there’s no good reason to ban women from wearing hats, but there’s also unfortunately no good reason to enshrine the right for women to wear hats, unless you consider the fact that some women want to do so for deeply held cultural reasons.
And you might say, well, isn’t “the state shouldn’t get to dictate whether or not anyone can wear hats, regardless of their religion” a good enough reason?
And the answer to that unfortunately is, no, it’s really manifestly not, as evidenced by observable reality. I wish it was. I wish we lived in a world where everyone balked at the idea that the government should get to exert massive control over the clothes you wear and the foods you eat and the languages you speak and the groups you choose to hang out with on the weekend. I wish we lived in a world where people didn’t problematize fundamentally harmless behaviors such as wearing hats, or drinking wine, or smoking peyote, or eating meat that has been processed in a specific manner, or taking vacation on specific days. These should be rights that everyone has, regardless of religion, and a just society ought to balk at any attempts to ban them.
But given that people just keep legislating bans on them, irrespective of the logic of “everyone should be free to do that because it harms no one” – and given that people keep doing so in a manner which is transparently for the purpose of persecuting people who find these innocuous things to be important – I’m forced to conclude that “religious liberties” are necessary for our current society.
To be clear, this is true for a lot of things. Racial justice shouldn’t be necessary either, but it’s hard to make the case that there should be legal protections in place to ensure that white people in the American South can’t just spontaneously decide to pour concrete into their public swimming pools for no reason. There should be, but “that’s a stupid and self-destructive thing to do without any rationale” is a much weaker argument for creating those legal protections than “they do have a rationale, and the rationale is racism”.
A cat is a machine that turns proteins into violence.
#Helios was declawed by his former owners so he doesn't just slap things he dislikes like most cats#he really only feels confident in hissing at them#Especially because a lot of the thing he doesn't like are bugs and those are sharp sometimes :(#Selene has figured this out and now when she hears him hiss she sprints over the kill the fuck out of the bug#Helios has learned she will do this so he'll hiss at stuff louder and louder until she hears him#A nervous old man and his emotional support homicidal maniac tags by @gallusrostromegalus
I couldn't reblog without the tags because the context is hilarious
A Nervous Old Man (right) and his Emotional Support Violence Machine (Left)
Yes, he is more than twice her size. Yes, he is five times her age. Yes, he cries like a big baby until she kills Unacceptable Scary Things (earwigs) for him.
Phoebe is in the same boat as Helios, except that she will choose violence every day of her life. That violence may be limited by her disability, but oh my g-d does she try. She tries all the time.
However, she has learned that because she has no claws, she can pet me back. And she does. I'll be sitting there just chilling and suddenly there is a paw stroking my face. It's adorable.
(Yes, yes. I know where those paws have been. I wash my face when she does this. But she was also abused by her first owners and never quite got out of some of her trauma habits even fourteen years after rescue, so if this is how she's picked up showing affection, I'm not going to tell her no.)
a Jewish woman making sourdough receives this:
now, you might ask, “why are they repeating ‘baby killers’ and accusations of ‘eating children’ so often?”
“why is this so ubiquitous on social media and even now in real life?”
A young Orthodox Jewish woman was hospitalized with a concussion after she was attacked in Manhattan by a fellow passenger
An exhibition in Margate of grotesque drawings by Matthew Collings is emblematic of the way the art world is normalising anti-Semitism. The
An art exhibition in Kent, England, is showcasing imagery rooted in classic antisemitic libels and denying documented atrocities from the Oc
There’s a dangerous myth spreading on social media. It’s radicalizing people and inspiring real-world violence: Jews have been falsely accus
There’s a dangerous myth spreading on social media. It’s radicalizing people and inspiring real-world violence: Jews have been falsely accused of "blood libel,” which has led to the persecution, massacres, and the expulsion of Jewish communities.
A group of anti-Israel activists staged a grotesque spectacle at Union Station in Washington, DC, on Thursday, resurrecting one of the oldes
actually, you probably wouldn’t ask why, because you’re reading this post, which means you’re either Jewish or an ally and already know all about blood libel.
still, it is growing in pervasive popularity, and it is as dangerous now in 2026 as it was in 1144, and every other time it has stained history, and has inevitably led to the murder of Jews.
what needs to be understood is that it is the very worst, most monstrous accusation most people can think of. in many ways it usurped the charge of deicide (though that is where this concept originated, Jews as the killers of Christ), a charge leveled specifically against Jews to prove them as a unique and inhuman evil, the corrupters and perverters and destroyers of everything pure, good, and innocent. Jews kill children on purpose, in fact, they even slaughter and consume them and use their blood for their profane rituals. it’s an easy lie, and a seductive one (it’s also absurd, but when has Judenhass ever been logical?). get the people to believe that and of course they’ll hate those responsible for it. let the messengers be those who are respected, admired, adored, and it will travel that much faster, be given that much more legitimacy.
this time, the charge is even more horrific because children have undeniably and wrongfully died in the midst of war, and that is being categorized as intent, as targeted murder, rather than as terrible casualties. the questions aren’t even about conduct or whether enough was done to prevent these deaths, whether there are soldiers and other officials that do need to be held to account. that doesn’t incite enough distress, that wouldn’t reasonably cause Jews around the globe to be attacked for it. instead it’s boiled down to the basest accusation: they’re Jews. killing kids is what they do.
the medieval town square is now every corner of social media. the trusted monks are now the celebrated entertainers and influencers and politicians.
I’ve borrowed this quote before and will again (and so does this astute video): The best way to bring folks together is to give them a real good enemy.
henmazzig:
Most people will admit they’ve absorbed something from the racism or sexism baked into movies and TV. That’s why we scrutinize problematic messages in media, and why every push to change them meets so much resistance. What people see affects how they think about others. In 2026, this is hardly a new idea. Yet even though false antisemitic ideas have been widespread in Western art and media for centuries, few are willing to accept that they might have absorbed anti-Jewish ideas. Like it or not, you have to work at it, actively, the way you would with any other bias you didn’t choose to inherit. Because the background hum of this society is that Jews are to blame for almost everything that goes wrong. It’s not a true story. Never has been. But it’s one that’s left its imprint on generations, and gotten millions of Jews killed in the process. That idea doesn’t disappear, even if it changes clothes.
(x)
“Nine centuries, one libel, and its genius has always been that it travels best on trusted lips - not the monster’s, the beloved’s.”
https://antisemitism.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Antisemitic-imagery-May-2020.pdf
The Blood Libel – William of Norwich – The Holocaust Explained: Designed for schools
NYU historian Edward Berenson's book about a shocking 1928 incident in upstate New York traces a current of anti-Semitism in American politi
Blood libels were false allegations that Jews used the blood of non-Jewish children in rituals. Learn about this antisemitic myth and how Na
UK petition: Maximum working temperature
UK work guidance has a minimum safe temperature for employees at work, but not a maximum one.
Click here to sign a petition to get the UK Health and Safety Executive to implement a maximum safe working temperature.
Here's the link to the official UK government petition. You can only sign if you are a UK resident or a British citizen, but if it gets enough signatures, it's required to be heard.
SIGN BOTH!!!
It's quick and easy and could save a life. My office reached 31 Celsius today. It was not the hottest office in the building. We do not have any fans for electrical safety reasons. There was an emergency ice pops run at lunch, which sounds funny but we were genuinely concerned our pregnant colleague was approaching heatstroke and the official guidance is to 'open a window'. Heat kills! Outdoor and manual jobs have it even worse right now too. I know I'm lucky to be able to be sitting down with free access to water during this!
In France if you suffer from hair loss as a teenage girl and cannot afford a real hair wig the school will try and force you to go to class bald. The school will make you buy a chemotherapy turban, you will buy two different so that the school can choose which one they prefer and you will prove that they are chemotherapy turban and not hijab but once you wear it they will change their mind and say it looks too much like a hijab and insist on you going bald or buying a real hair wig that you cannot afford.
If your doctor makes multiple documents confirming that you suffer from alopecia because of stress and the medicine you have to take for your epilepsy and that wearing a bonnet or something is recommended for your mental health as you’re not ready to go out bald in high school as a teenage girl, instead of admitting they are wrong the school will accuse the doctor of lying and report him to the Ordre des Médecins (equivalent of the General Medical council). Your doctor will find himself asking you for a document stating that you are not Muslim in order to defend himself and prove that no he wasn’t colluding with you so you could wear a substitute for hijab.
Source
───────
In France if you are a North African nurse at a public hospital and wear a fabric surgical cap they will try to make you remove it because apparently it’s a hidden hijab. They will accuse you of going against secularism and when you’ll argue that they are discriminating you by assuming you’re Muslim for a surgical cap on your head they will change their angle and claim that you should wear nothing on your hair because you wear the same surgical cap in multiple bedroom which is unhygienic apparently (which is a bullshit argument cause you wear the same scrub/uniform in different bedrooms as well). They will go as far as claiming that disposable scrub caps (you know the thin papery ones?) are not okay to wear in a hospital even if you change it regularly. And then they will fire you for a lack of hygiene because you wear a surgical cap.
Source
───────
All of that will be done in the name of secularism and women’s right despite having nothing do with either quite the opposite.
The teenage girl’s story is also not just about racism and Islamophobia it’s also about ableism as the girl is convinced that the real reason the school is trying to push her out is because she had an epilepsy crisis in class and nobody knew what to do and the school nurse was absent. It could have ended badly had her best friend not known what to do to help. Apparently it was bad enough to cancel class for the rest of the day and the teacher was shocked to the point of ending on sick leave.
oh and don't forget that many parts of France mandate by law how much skin women must show in swimsuits, which they claim is about not getting street dirt in public pools but which is disproportionately enforced on Muslim or even just Middle Eastern/North African women
(and of course is also some forced nudity misogynistic bullshit in general, to boot)
You'd think people would be able to figure out that ordering women to expose themselves more than they want to is not okay, in 2026.
WINNING AN UNFAIR FIGHT
The second key lesson from Hungary is an even more hopeful one. Even when an electoral autocratic regime has consolidated power and rigged the system in the ruling party’s favor, it can still be defeated at the ballot box. Many observers are treating the fact that Magyar was able to defeat Orban as proof that Hungary always remained a democracy. As the New York Times columnist Ross Douthat put it, “If your entrenched ruling party can lose everything in a wave election, you are not living in an authoritarian state.”
But such claims fundamentally misunderstand the nature of electoral autocracies like the one Orban built. These systems, also known as competitive authoritarian regimes, are not the kinds of coercive dictatorships found in Belarus, China, or Russia. They do not ban opposition parties outright or arrest their leaders. But this does not make them democratic. When, over many years, a ruling party abuses state resources to severely tilt the playing field in its favor, it departs from the core principle of fair competition, a hallmark of democracy. Features such as a level electoral playing field, an independent judiciary, and a diverse media landscape are not merely auxiliary institutions that enhance democracy. They are its constituent parts.
Although it is exceedingly difficult for the democratic opposition to dislodge the leader of an electoral autocracy, Hungary is a reminder that it is not impossible. Consider this analogy: in 2009, when the welterweight boxing champion Antonio Margarito fought Shane Mosley with illegally loaded gloves, Mosley still found a way to win. Officials confirmed that Margarito had cheated, and he was suspended from professional boxing, even though he lost the fight. Similarly, antidemocratic behavior doesn’t become acceptable just if it happens to be ineffective.
Magyar provided a remarkable example of how a democratic opposition can prevail even when an electoral autocrat such as Orban is fighting with loaded gloves. Unlike his predecessors, Magyar united almost all opposition forces, built a nationwide grassroots campaign, and offered a powerful anti-regime message that helped voters connect the decline in their living standards with the Orban regime’s corruption. Magyar got this message out to voters even though Hungary’s government did not allow him to appear on public television during the entire campaign. Ironically, Magyar’s Tisza Party ended up benefiting from aspects of Orban’s election rigging scheme. Orban had always expected that his party would be Hungary’s largest bloc and that the opposition would be divided. So he had redesigned Hungary’s election laws to give a huge advantage in parliamentary seats to the party that obtained the plurality of votes, particularly if it had a rural base. When Magyar united the opposition and attracted the most votes across Hungary, his party ended up benefiting from the system Orban had intended to serve his own party. This surprising development offered a useful reminder that even when an electoral autocrat has tilted the playing field severely, the system may still have vulnerabilities that the opposition can exploit.
For the global battle between democracy and authoritarianism, then, the Hungarian case is sobering and encouraging at the same time. It shows how, when centrists betray their democratic values for expediency, they foster the rise of autocrats. The first autocratic government in the EU, after all, was not the product of external meddling by China, Russia, or JD Vance; it was spawned by Europe’s own establishment center-right. But Orban’s defeat also suggests that electoral authoritarianism can be reversed peacefully at the ballot box—as long as the center-right takes a stand and joins forces with a broad, cross-partisan democratic opposition.
How to Beat an Autocrat: The Real Lessons of Orban’s Defeat
idk if Romani counts as asian, but i think it does-
Anyway im Romani and it actually makes me so angry that it’s basically normalized to call my race by a slur. Most people think the slur is the actual name. And a lot of people treat me like a criminal when they learn im Romani, joking about how I must know how to pickpocket
this is orientalism.